Cavaliers Advance to Face Knicks in Eastern Conference Finals After Game 7 Victory

The Cleveland Cavaliers closed out their first-round playoff run in decisive fashion, securing a Game 7 victory on the road against the Detroit Pistons to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2018. The win sets up a marquee matchup against the New York Knicks, a series that pits two of the NBA's most storied franchises against one another with a conference title—and a likely NBA Finals berth—on the line.
Donovan Mitchell led the Cavs' charge throughout the series, delivering the kind of performative excellence that has defined his playoff career. In three career Game 7s, Mitchell has averaged 27.6 points and 7.0 rebounds per game. His late-second-quarter sequence in Game 7, described by league feeds as "a Spida bite at the end of the quarter," helped establish a halftime lead that the Cavs would not relinquish.
James Harden, acquired to provide veteran playoff experience alongside Mitchell, has contributed 20.9 points per game across the 2026 postseason. His performance in the series against Detroit offered evidence that the Cavs' secondary scoring can hold up against playoff-caliber defense—a question that lingered entering the postseason.
The Cavs' advancement marks a significant inflection point for a franchise that has rebuilt methodically since LeBron James' departure. Cleveland now faces a Knicks team that has drawn considerable attention from oddsmakers. SportsLine's projection model, maintained by data engineer Stephen Oh, suggests the Knicks still carry significant value in futures markets despite their advancing opponents. The gap between market-implied odds and the model's projections points to lingering skepticism in the betting market about New York's championship viability—a skepticism the Knicks will have the opportunity to address directly over the coming weeks.
The Eastern Conference Finals format positions both teams for extended rest periods, with the series unlikely to begin before the latter half of the week. For the Knicks, the matchup represents a chance to reach the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999. For the Cavs, the stakes are equally clear: a franchise-defining series that could reshape the team's trajectory heading into the summer.
Desk note: Monexus led with the Cavs' victory and Mitchell's performance, a framing that foregrounds the team achieving a milestone rather than the Knicks as the series favorite. The SportsLine reference was included to convey the analytical layer beneath the result—oddsmakers' pricing and the gap between market odds and quantitative models is part of how this story sits inside a broader sports-media ecosystem where performance and prediction interact.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/10847
- https://t.me/NBALive/10845
- https://t.me/NBALive/10843
- https://t.me/NBALive/10842
- https://t.me/NBALive/10841